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OUE^TE^ 


THE  20-MULE-TEAM  BRIGADE 

Being  a  story  in  Jingles  of  the  good  works 

and  adventures  of  the  famous 

"  Twenty-Mule-Team  " 


Illustrations    by    PETER    NEWELL 


PUBLISHED  BY 

THE    PACIFIC   COAST    BORAX    CO. 

NEW  YORK  ■    CHICAGO    •  SAN  FRANCISCO 


"  Each  Warrior  bears  a  trusty  gun  - 


ASTOR   LENOX  AND 


THE  TWENTY-MULE-TEAM  BRfCXOE 

HERE  is  a  band  of  twenty  mules,  "  My  noble  men,"  their  Captain  said. 

Enlisted  for  the  fight  "Before  we  sally  out, 
Against  the  King  of  Dirt  who  rules         We'll  rid  this  home  of  old  King  Dirt, 
His  armies,  black  as  night.  And  put  his  host  to  rout. 


Each  warrior  bears  a  trusty  gun  — 
The  best  that  he  can  find  — 
And  this  is  charged  with  pure  Borax 
The  20-Mule-Teamkind. 


Then  let  us  to  the  kitchen  go. 
And  there  begin  the  fight ; 
The  kitchen  where  the  food  is  cooked 
Should  cleanly  be  and  bright." 


'  Halt ! '  sharply  cried  the  Captain.     '  Fire  ' ' 


THE    BATTLE   OF   DISH    PAN   HILL 


A 


ND  so  this  Borax  army  marched 
In  through  the  kitchen  door, 
And  there  beheld  a  tarnished  fort 
Of  tinware  on  the  floor. 


Behind  the  pans  and  kettles  stood, 
In  sullen  black  array, 
A  grimy  band  of  vicious  Imps 
All  ready  for  the  fray. 

"Halt!"  sharply  cried  the  Captain.    "Fire!" 
And  all  along  the  line. 
The  volleys  rang  and  rang  again  — 
My!  but  the  sight  was  fine! 


The  borax  powder  swept  the  fort, 
And  rattled  pot  and  pan; 
The  grimy  Imps  were  rattled,  too. 
And  dropped  their  arms  and  ran, 

Till  every  skulking  Imp  was  gone. 
And  every  thing  was  clean. 
The  tinware  shone  like  burnished  gold 
Like  burnished  tin,  I  mean. 

And  so  was  ended,  happily. 

The  fight  of  Dish  Pan  Hill; 

The  mules  all  cheered  and  waved  their 

And  with  a  hearty  will.  ^       ' 


"But  Borax  poultice  well  applied  at  once  relieved  his  pain — ' 


ACCIDENT  ON  THE  WAY  TO  NURSERY 


M 


Y  noble  men,"  the  Captain  said, 
"  We'll  take  a  change  of  air. 
And  look  into  the  nursery, 
And  rout  the  Imps  in  there. 


The  children's  health  must  be  preserved - 
No  duty  is  more  plain  — 
So  we  will  purify  their  room. 
And  thus  their  favor  gain." 

So  up  two  flights  of  stairs  they  marched, 
But  ere  they  reached  the  top, 
A  clumsy  private  tripped  and  fell  — 
He  thought  he'd  never  stop ! 


It  was  a  quite  extended  trip, 
And  rough  at  every  point ; 
It  landed  him  down  in  the  hall. 
And  sore  in  every  joint. 

But  Borax  poultice  well  applied 

At  once  relieved  his  pain  — 

So  up  he  jumped  and  climbed  the  stair, 

And  joined  his  friends  again. 

Then  in  the  nursery  they  went  — 
This  noble  Borax  band  — 
And  sure  enough  there  was  a  host 
Of  grimy  Imps  on  hand. 


"  My !  How  this  pony's  anger  burned  !  Although  it  didn't  smoke  !  " 


THE    BATTLE    OF   ROCKY    POINT 


A 


ND  all  the  Imps  were  casting  dirt, 
And  striving  to  o'erthrow 
A  very  pretty  Hobby  Horse, 
With  coat  as  white  as  snow. 


My !  How  this  pony's  anger  burned ! 
Although  it  didn't  smoke ! 
And  back  and  forth  he  madly  rocked 
At  these  pernicious  folk. 

But  little  cared  they  for  his  rocks  — 
They  dodged  them,  everyone. 
But  when  the  mules  began  to  fire. 
Ah !  then  there  was  some  fun ! 


And  thus  the  room  was  brightened  up, 
And  rendered  clean  and  sweet 
In  every  part,  with  thoroughness  — 
Ah,  Borax's  hard  to  beat! 

And  then  again  the  warriors  cheered  — 
The  Hobby  Horse  joined  in, 
With  all  the  other  happy  toys. 
And  made  a  joyful  din. 

They  called  the  battle  "Rocky  Point," 
Because  their  friend,  new  made, 
The  Hobby  Horse,  was  on  the  rock. 
When  they  came  to  his  aid. 


'  Mount  Washington  began  to  melt,  and  soon  was  on  the  line ! " 


THE    MELTING   OF   MT.   WASHINGTON 


'A 


ND  now  my  men",  the  Captain  said, 
"We've  done  here  what  we  could; 
Suppose  the  laundry  we  invade, 
And  try  to  do  some  good." 


The  wash  was  piled  upon  the  floor. 
And  quite  a  mount  it  made  — 
Mount  Wash-ington,  a  mule  declared. 
And  all  his  comrades  brayed ! 

But  straight  to  work  these  warriors  went, 
And  soon  the  clothes  were  tubbed, 
And  Borax  sifted  in  the  suds, 
And  every  piece  was  scrubbed. 


My!  how  the  dirt  did  disappear  — 
Thanks  to  the  Borax,  fine ! 
Mount  Washington  began  to  melt. 
And  soon  was  on  the  line! 

"Oh!  won't  the  girl  be  glad,  my  men!" 

The  Captain  said  with  glee, 
"  When  she  comes  down  to  do  her  wash. 

And  finds  it  done !  He!  He!" 

Now  Jane,  the  girl,  had  common  sense, 
And  so  she  kept  on  hand. 
From  that  time  forth,  a  Borax  stock  — 
The  20-Mule-Team-Brand. 


"And  three  or  four  with  hearty  cheer,  jumped  in  like  jolly  frogs 


THE  BRIGADE  TAKES  A  BATH 


F 


ROM  room  to  room  these  warriors 
And  waged  a  warfare  keen,  ^  ' 

Against  the  power  of  old  King  Dirt, 
Till  all  the  house  was  clean. 


Then  having  finished  well  their  work. 
Again  they  climbed  the  stair, 
In  broken  ranks  with  mulish  pranks, 
A  welcome  bath  to  share. 

They  filled  the  tub  with  water  clear. 
And  slipped  outside  their  togs. 
And  three  or  four  with  hearty  cheer. 
Jumped  in  like  jolly  frogs. 


Jumped  m,  I  say,  but  that  was  all ; 
For,  friends,  what  do  you  think ! 
The  water  was  so  very  hard, 
They  found  they  could  not  sink ! 

A  situation  queer  as  this 
Is  wrong,  you  must  admit ; 
And  so  they  sprinkled  Borax  in 
The  water — just  a  bit. 

This  made  it  soft,  and  in  they  sank 
And  kicked  and  splashed  it  high, 
Till  ordered  out  that  others  might 
Their  places  occupy. 


Peter  K«w«0 


'  Ere  long  their  Captain  shouted  :  '  March  ! '  " 


AN  APRIL  FOOL  ON  THE  MARCH 


o 


UT  in  the  yard  these  veterans  Ere  long  their  Captain  shouted:  "March!" 

Now  stood  with  colors  spread.        Then  spake  a  private,  cool : 


How  oft  their  mettle  had  been      "It  isn't  March;  it's  April,  sir — 
[tried. 
When  bravely  they  were  lead !  Someone's  an  April  Fool ! " 


Which  was  a  very  saucy  thing. 
Indeed,  for  him  to  say. 
And  so  his  mouth  was  well  rinsed  out 
With  Borax,  right  away. 


T 


A  NIGHT  ATTACK 

HAT  night  they  camped  within  a  wood      But  so  it  chanced  that  in  the  tree 

And  built  a  fire  with  oak,  A  swarm  of  bees  were  caged, 

Against  a  hollow  tree  that  served  And  when  the  smoke  disturbed  their 

[rest. 
To  carry  off  the  smoke.  They  sallied  forth,  enraged. 


And  how  they  chased  those  twenty  mules, 
And  punctured  well  their  hide! 
But,  lo !  their  smarts  were  straightway  eased. 
When  Borax  was  applied. 


\H'  \]  'i^'fll 


'  And  how  they  chased  those  twenty  mules,  and  punctured  well  their  hide ! ' 


A  SILENT  SENTINEL 

WHEN'ER  a  20-Mule-Team  Brave 
Was  wearied  with  the  fray, 
He  rested  in  a  Borax  ring 
To  keep  the  bugs  away. 

But  if  perchance  a  single  bug 
Had  crossed  the  line  to  harm  him, 
He  would  have  known  it  instantly; 
The  ring  would  have  alarmed  him! 


'  He  tested  in  a  Borax  ring  to  keep  the  bugs  away. " 


A  RATHER  STICKY  EXPERIENCE 

ONE  day,  within  a  grove  of  spruce,  So  on  a  board  they  wrote  a  sign. 

They  gathered  gum  to  chew.  And  tacked  it  to  a  tree. 

But,  oh!  it  was  so  sticky  that  Right  in  the  middle  of  the  grove 

It  acted  quite  like  glue !  Where  everyone  could  see. 


They  could  not  separate  their  teeth. 
However  hard  they  tried. 
Till  with  a  tooth-brush,  smartly  used, 
Some  Borax  they  applied. 


It  said:  "There's  nothing  quite  so  good 
With  which  to  brush  the  teeth. 
As  20-Mule-Team-Borax.     Yours," 
And  signed  their  names  beneath. 


'  One  day,  within  a  grove  of  spruce,  they  gathered  Gum  to  chew." 


A  CASE  OF  CHICKEN-POX 

A  MULE  broke  out  with  chicken-pox- 
Broke  out  his  tent,  you  see, 
And  so  exposed  the  other  mules 
That  chanced  around  to  be. 

And  did  he  spread  the  dire  disease? 
Not  he,  the  precious  scamp! 
They  scattered  Borax  everywhere 
To  disinfect  the  camp. 


"A  mule  broke  out  with  chicken-pox — broke  out  his  tent,  you  see.' 


A  FUNNY  INCIDENT 


A 


ND  so  these  mules  from  place  to        One  day  these  warriors  chanced  upon 

[place, 
Did  wander  in  and  out,  A  dirty,  ill-kept  mule. 


Adventures  meeting  everywhere.       Out  in  a  pasture  all  alone, 
With  laughter  and  with  shout;  Which  plot  he  seemed  to  rule. 


Suppressing  filth  and  doing  good 
To  all  they  chanced  to  meet. 
Except  of  course  the  grimy  Imps, 
Who  always  met  defeat. 


"We'll  clean  him  up ! "  the  Captain  said. 
"  He  needs  a  good  shampoo ; 

And  so  we'll  show  him  for  his  good. 

What  Borax  wash  will  do ! " 


';  ■      '(;.,      ...Ill"/ 


Peter  K-^eU 


"The  mules  declared  he  looked  just  like  a  great  big  woolly  sheep." 


They  drenched  him  to  the  skin,  and  then 
They  rubbed  him  all  around, 
Until  the  lather  rose  like  wool. 
And  trickled  to  the  ground. 


And  then  they  ducked  him  in  a  pond, 
And  rinsed  the  lather  out ; 
And  out  he  came  a  cleanly  mule. 
And  better  mule,  no  doubt. 


The  mules  declared  he  looked  just  like  And  so  this  story  we  will  end, 

A  great  big  wooly  sheep.  With  three  good  hearty  cheers 

They  laughed  so  hard  they  almost  died,  For  Borax  and  the  twenty  mules. 

And  salty  tears  did  weep !  And  forty  waving  ears ! 

THE  END. 


.-Ki  J  ri    L  Ci    CULATION 
CHILDREN'S  ROOM 


A  WORD  ABOUT  BORAX 


BORAX  A  HOUSEHOLD  NECESSITY 

EVERYONE  who  values  cleanliness  and  sweetness  should 
use  Borax.  In  the  toilet,  bath,  laundry,  in  every  cleans- 
I  ing  process  of  the  home  Borax  should  be  used.  It  doubles 
the  power  of  soap  and  water  to  cleanse  and  purify.  You 
will  be  astonished  to  see  how  much  easier  and  cleaner  you  can 
wash  things  by  adding  a  little  Borax  to  the  water.  But  be 
careful  to  get  Pure  Borax  as  imitations  are  worthless  and  often 
injurious.   Ask  for  "20-MULE-TEAM  BRAND."   Ifs  Pure. 

THE    PACIFIC    COAST    BORAX    CO. 

Largest  Refiners  of  Pure  Borax  in  the  World 
NEW  YORK  •    CHICAGO    •   SAN  FRANCISCO 


In  the  heart  of  the  desert— the  "20-Mule  Team"  hauling  Borax 


CENTRAL  CIRCULATION 
OHILDKEN'S  ROOM